UK Addiction To SURVEILLANCE: The BIG BROTHER Society. CCTV, Freedoms & Privacy ?
There are up to 5.9 million CCTV cameras in Britain, according to a report by The British Security Industry Association.
It's thought Britain could have more CCTV cameras than any other country in the world.
Evidence
Footage
from CCTV cameras is often used by police as evidence to convict
criminals, and some people believe this helps prevent crime.
Much
of Britain has been fixated on this number ever since (a figure derived
by counting those cameras present on Putney High Street in London and
extrapolating upwards for a 'guesstimate'). We've been consistently
bombarded with hypotheses on the supposed rise of the "Surveillance
State" and George Orwell's Big Brother coming to life ever since.
The
BSIA's 51-page document focuses on the number of properties in the UK,
floor area, and "alternative appropriate estimates". It accounts for the
number of CCTV cameras located in (for example) offices, factories,
warehouses, schools, department stores, car parks, and railway stations,
and those deployed for "security surveillance, related monitoring and
safety aspects". Low-, medium-, and upper-level camera figures for the
UK are tabulated.
According to the BSIA, camera numbers in the
private sector could be outweighing those operated by the police and
local authorities by a factor of somewhere around 70:1.
So the
vast majority of cameras are privately owned and operated -- very much
contrary to popular opinion that we're all living in a "Surveillance
State".
Parliament has made a pleasing start to regulating CCTV
and its operation, not least through the auspices of the Security
Industry Authority and its own Public Space Surveillance licensing
regime.
Is it, though, addressing what many commentators believe
to be the central challenge -- the extent of camera proliferation in the
private sector and the need for it to be closely monitored?
As
stated, evidence to help solve cases of criminality unearthed by the
police service often comes from cameras stationed in the private sector,
but how many times have we heard about "less than perfect"
installations or accusations of generally poor CCTV management? Are CCTV
systems genuinely "fit for purpose" (i.e. are they fully operational
and recording properly)? Do surveillance solutions meet the needs of
their end-users (around image quality, for example)?
Increasingly,
more companies wish their premises to be protected by CCTV, but, at the
very same time, more non-specialist installers are entering the fray
and itching to grab a slice of the commercial action.
Such
regulation will ensure the private sector provides the highest-quality
video evidence possible for use by the police and the courts. A
situation that's very much for the public good.
A new camera
technology from Hitachi Hokusai Electric can scan days of camera footage
instantly, and find any face which has EVER walked past it.
ts makers boast that it can scan 36 million faces per second.
The
technology raises the spectre of governments -- or other organisations
-- being able to 'find' anyone instantly simply using a passport photo
or a Facebook profile.
The 'trick' is that the camera 'processes'
faces as it records, so that all faces which pass in front of it are
recorded and stored instantly.
Faces are stored as a searchable 'biometric' record, storing the unique
When
the police -- or anyone else -- want to search for a particular
individual, they're searching through a gallery of pre-indexed faces,
rather than a messy library of footage.
It is so intrusive that
Britain may be in breach of human rights laws, he warned, and most
people are ignorant of how sophisticated technology has become.
technological
ability to use millions of images we capture -- there will be a huge
public backlash. It is the Big Brother scenario playing out large. It's
the ability to pick out your face in a crowd from a camera which is
probably half a mile away."
Imagine if Google or Facebook decided
to install their own CCTV cameras everywhere, gathering data about our
movements, recording our lives and joining up every camera in the land
in one giant control room. It's Orwellian surveillance with fluffier
branding. And this isn't just video surveillance --
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